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Search Result for “Chinese tourists”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

THAILAND

The knock-on effect for Bangkok's knock-offs

Spectrum, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 20/01/2013

» Last week, a man came to tell Jasmine, a vendor in the Nana area, that the Department of Special Investigation would be conducting a raid. He took the unusual step of telling her not only to temporarily close down, but to move all of her counterfeit goods back home for two days.

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LIFE

Hearts in the darkness

B Magazine, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 06/01/2013

» Chris Coles _ in a book on noir and an ongoing exhibition at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand _ is one of the few artists to record the people and transactions of Bangkok's red light districts with all their vivid idiosyncrasies. He paints bright scenes in acrylics or watercolours, shapes the human form simply through thick black lines and captures some essential truths of a tawdry reality.

THAILAND

Development rush could doom Yangon's architectural treasures

Spectrum, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 07/10/2012

» For local investors they are unwieldy behemoths occupying prime real estate. For the nostalgic they remain noble vestiges of an era almost forgotten, when the city, then called Rangoon, was the most cosmopolitan in the region. For tourists they are one of Asia's most concentrated collections of colonial buildings and grand sights in themselves, unartificially preserved in time. For nationalists they can be an unwanted reminder of less independent times, when the subjugated people were answerable to the caprices of colonial authorities.

TRAVEL

All that wasn't washed away

B Magazine, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 19/08/2012

» At Koh Kret a Mon man points to a mark on the wall at the height of his head. "The water was here," he says of last October and November. "It was a bad time."

TRAVEL

'Asia's Vegas' more than bright lights

B Magazine, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 13/05/2012

» Mediterranean-style cobblestone squares. Chinese shophouses. Western brand outlets. Cantonese dim sum for brunch and galinha a Portuguesa (Portuguese-style chicken) for dinner. Sixteenth-century cathedrals and forts stand beside Chinese mansions and gardens, or temples thick with incense. Garish high-rise casinos and decrepit apartment blocks form a backdrop over narrow winding lanes along the old city walls _ a clash of tastes that mesmerises and disorients.

TRAVEL

The Netherlands: Beyond the naughty bits

B Magazine, Ezra Kyrill Erker, Published on 05/02/2012

» While the Netherlands might be most commonly associated with the excesses of Amsterdam, its capital, there is a vibrant cultural scene here dating back centuries.